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	<title>Comments for Newsflash: Latinos breath air, consume food</title>
	
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		<id>tag:ta-nehisicoates.theatlantic.com,2008://31.41861</id>
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		<link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://ta-nehisicoates.theatlantic.com/mt-42/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=8/entry_id=5533" title="Newsflash: Latinos breath air, consume food" />
		<published>2008-01-27T23:52:02Z</published>
		<updated>2008-08-04T16:51:38Z</updated>
		<title>Newsflash: Latinos breath air, consume food</title>
		<summary>Greg Rodriguez brings it. The essence: Nationwide, no fewer than eight black House members--including New York&apos;s Charles Rangel and Texas&apos; Al Green--represent districts that are more than 25% Latino and must therefore depend heavily on Latino votes. And there are...</summary>
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			<![CDATA[<p>Greg Rodriguez <a href="http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1707221,00.html">brings it</a>. The essence:</p>

<blockquote><p>Nationwide, no fewer than eight black House members--including New
York's Charles Rangel and Texas' Al Green--represent districts that are
more than 25% Latino and must therefore depend heavily on Latino votes.
And there are other examples. University of Washington political
scientist Matt Barreto has begun compiling a list of black big-city
mayors who have received large-scale Latino support over the past
several decades. In 1983, Harold Washington pulled 80% of the Latino
vote in Chicago. David Dinkins won 73% in New York City's mayoral race
in 1989. And Denver's Wellington Webb garnered more than 70% in 1991,
as did Ron Kirk in Dallas in 1995 and again in 1997 and '99. If he had
gone back further, Barreto could have added longtime Los Angeles mayor
Tom Bradley, who won a majority of Latino votes in all four of his
re-election campaigns between 1977 and 1989.</p></blockquote>

<p>That is just, well, true. I've said my <a href="http://tanehisi.typepad.com/tanehisi_coates/2008/01/the-black-latin.html">piece</a> on Latino racism, but I think at the end of the day Greg is just right. To simply say Obama lost Nevada because Latinos hate blacks is reductionist. It's the sort of line which, one word at a time, strips Latinos of any sort of complexity and humanity.</p>]]>
			
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